by Andre, Bella
“Good timing,” she murmured, getting up. She set aside the questionnaire, thinking it was stupid, anyway, then opened the door to find Roy from the Running Y Ranch.
“Hi, Roy,” she said. “I didn’t think you were going to make it today.”
“I don’t miss on the days you sell apple. You’ve got one left, I hope.”
“I do. I have a Dutch apple and a sour cream apple, but that’s about it.”
“I’ll take the Dutch.”
“Come on in while I get it.” She went to the freezer in the small attached garage and brought back the pie he’d requested. “Been busy?” she asked conversationally as she wrote out his sales ticket.
He scowled. “You could say that. The owner’s sent his snot-nosed grandson out here for me to baby-sit.”
“How old is he?”
“He’s got to be thirty, but it’s baby-sitting all the same.”
“Why’s that?”
“He’s supposed to take over the ranch, but he don’t know dollars from doughnuts.”
Delaney handed him his pie. “He must not be a country boy.”
“He’s not. First day here, he asks me what kind of cattle we’re runnin’ and wants to know whether we’ve fenced the entire property.”
She laughed. “Doesn’t the BLM own part of it?”
“Yeah.”
“Can he sit a horse?” she asked, accepting his eight dollars in exchange for the pie.
“From what I saw yesterday, he can, but only because he’s as ornery as they are.”
“Well, if he’s that ornery, he might make a good cowboy, given time. How long is he planning to stay?”
“Hasn’t said, but I give him three months. He’s not used to gettin’ his hands dirty, and there ain’t no way a pretty boy like that’s gonna last.”
“Well, I hope you’re rid of him soon.”
“You and me both,” he said, and with a tip of his hat, he stepped outside, where he nearly ran into Rebecca, who was coming up the walk.
“Hi, Roy,” she said, grabbing his arm to steady herself so she didn’t fall into the muddy flower bed. “I cut Dottie’s hair today at the beauty parlor. Said you got company out at the ranch.”
“We got trouble, you mean,” he grumbled. “Can’t you use the help?”
“I need a cook for when Dottie’s daughter has her baby and Dottie goes out of state to help her. I don’t need someone who doesn’t know a damn thing about cooking or ranching.”
“Dottie didn’t seem to think Clive’s grandson is so bad,” Rebecca said.
“That’s ’cause she wants to set him up with her niece.”
“So he’s single?” Rebecca asked.
“Far as I know. But there’s no need to break off with Buddy. This guy’s a short-timer. He’s just here to please Grandpa. Soon as his backside’s sore enough from ridin’, he’ll head home to California. And the sooner the better, I say.”
Delaney could understand Roy’s frustration. These were hard times for ranchers, and he was a no-nonsense type who liked to get the job done. But his impatience with Dundee’s newcomer made her feel a touch empathetic. She’d once been new. What would she have done if the town hadn’t opened its arms to her?
“Wait a second, Roy,” she said. “I have one pie left. Maybe I should send it with you for your guest. It might make him feel more welcome.”
“I have bigger things to worry about than pampering the pampered,” he retorted.
“It’ll just take a minute.”
“No, he’s had everything he’s ever wanted. And from what his uncles tell me, he hasn’t been worth his keep since the day he was born.”
“I said I want to send him a pie!”
Roy’s eyes widened at her firm tone, and he looked questioningly at Rebecca.
Rebecca shrugged. “Assertiveness training,” she said, squeezing around him to enter the house.
“Oh,” he said. “Sure, send him a pie if it’s that important to you.”
Delaney nodded, feeling somewhat vindicated after that lousy questionnaire—and a little embarrassed about taking such a strong stand. “Beck, write him a quick welcome note for me,” she said, and dashed off to the garage for the last pie.
CONNER WAS GETTING A HEADACHE. Breaking only for dinner, he’d spent hours in the study, researching the cattle industry on the Internet and looking for other avenues of income, like mining or farming. But nothing he’d found seemed plausible for the Running Y. There wasn’t much silver or gold in the area. No molybdenum or industrial garnets or phosphate rock as there were in other parts of the state. And the rugged mountains made it too impractical to plant feed or other crops. Which meant Conner had to do something else. But what? He was running out of ideas. Hoping for a revelation, he started visiting the Web sites of various cities in Idaho and bordering states, to gain familiarity with the area and make note of population, agriculture and industry. But after another hour of reading charts, graphs, maps and summaries, he sat back with a sigh and pressed his palms to his tired eyes.
You’re crazy to be doing this, a voice in his head taunted, taking advantage of the quiet room and creeping discouragement. If you think you’ll finally prove yourself worthy of the Armstrong name, you’re a fool. Nothing’s going save this place. And if you own it, if you take it into your heart and soul, you’ll walk away even emptier than when you came here.
“Shut up,” Conner said, teeth clenched.
But the voice merely laughed at him. Don’t risk it, man. Pack up and walk out. You know the routine. You’ve done it plenty of times before—
There was a knock at the office door. “Conner? You in there?”
Roy. Just what he needed—more quality time with his foreman.
“Come in,” he said, swiveling away from the computer. The door opened and Roy strode in, boots thudding against the carpet. He carried a square white box, which he placed on the edge of Conner’s desk. “Gal from town sent ya somethin’.”
“What is it?” Conner asked.
“What’s it look like?” he said, and left.
Conner stood, pulled the box closer and read the attached note.
Welcome to Dundee. I sell pies for $8 every Sunday, but this is a free sample. Number 8 Second Street. Delaney Lawson.
Delaney! Conner stiffened when he read the name. Surely this woman couldn’t be the Delaney he’d met in Boise. That Delaney was from Jerome, which was nearly four hours away.
Crossing quickly to the door, Conner hollered down the hall and managed to catch Roy just before he headed outside, presumably to the small cabins beyond the barn.
“Who is this Delaney person?” he asked.
The two golden retrievers, Sundance and Champ, who belonged to the ranch, came charging down the hall, tails wagging.
“Just a gal in town,” Roy said.
Dottie poked her head out of the kitchen, where she was still cleaning up the dinner dishes, judging by her wet hands. “Are you talking about Delaney Lawson?”
“She sent him a pie,” Roy volunteered.
“Bless her heart.” Dottie dried her hands on the towel slung over her shoulder. “That little Delaney’s a dear thing. And she makes the best-tasting pie you’ll ever want to eat. She used to win every baking ribbon at the fair and—”
“What does she look like?” Conner interrupted, too impatient to wait through what promised to be a litany of praise.
“She’s pretty, but she’s getting up in age and it doesn’t look as though she’s ever gonna marry. Spends all her time at the library or baking.”
Delaney certainly wasn’t “getting up in age” and didn’t seem the type to closet herself away in a library. Besides, she’d said she was in Boise on business. He could be wrong, but he didn’t think librarians traveled on business. At least, he wouldn’t expect a librarian from a small town like Dundee to do so.
“Does she have any siblings?” he asked, racking his brain to remember the details he’d learned about his myst
ery woman’s family.
“Not a one,” Dottie answered. “Our little Laney was raised by Millie and Ralph Lawson. They’re a gentle old couple who owned the drugstore for years and years. I remember stopping by there on my way home from school to buy candy when I was just a girl. They’re retired now. Sold the store to the Livingstons, but Ralph and Millie still live in the same house they’ve always lived in, right off Front Street.”
“They don’t own a large farm?” Conner asked, finally giving in to the dogs’ persistence and bending to give them each a pat. “They don’t have any ties to Jerome?”
“Jerome?” Dottie echoed.
“They don’t own a farm. They don’t have any ties to Jerome,” Roy insisted, still poised at the front door. “Laney’s the town librarian, and she’s the type that likes to look after people. She wanted to make you feel welcome, so she sent you a pie. That’s it. Don’t read anything more into this,” he said, and the screen door slammed behind him.
“Roy’s right,” Dottie agreed. “I don’t think Millie and Ralph have any kin in Jerome. And they’ve certainly never owned a farm.”
“Of course.” Conner straightened, feeling silly for pressing them so hard—and strangely disappointed at the same time. Dundee’s Delaney probably wore thick glasses and thick-soled shoes. The townsfolk considered her too unappealing to find a husband. And now that he thought about it, the bold, loopy handwriting on the note that had arrived with the pie looked nothing like Delaney’s neat “Thank you.” Obviously, he had the wrong person.
“Is something wrong, Mr. Armstrong?” Dottie asked, and Conner realized he was still standing in the hall, staring off into space, picturing the Delaney he’d wanted it to be, the one with the smile he’d never forget.
“No, nothing,” he said and forced a congenial nod before shooing Sundance and Champ away and turning back to his office. “Just thought I recognized the name.”
“SO? WHAT DOES IT SAY?” Rebecca demanded, and Delaney knew, from the sound of her voice that she was hovering just outside the bathroom door.
“Nothing yet. You’re supposed to give it a few minutes,” she said, gnawing anxiously on her bottom lip. She’d waited three weeks to take the in-home pregnancy test they’d driven nearly all the way to Boise to purchase. Now, at long last, the moment of truth had arrived. In less than two minutes, the little plastic indicator would turn pink—if Delaney was pregnant.
“I don’t think you’re pregnant. Your breasts haven’t been sore, have they?” Rebecca said through the panel.
Delaney’s breasts had seemed a little more sensitive than usual, but she couldn’t exactly claim they’d been sore. Considering how badly she didn’t want to be pregnant from that encounter at the Bellemont, it was entirely possible that her mind was playing tricks on her.
“I don’t think so,” she hedged. “But it’s only been three weeks. Is there supposed to be a difference in so short a time?”
“I don’t know. But my sisters complained about being tired right from the start, and you’ve had your normal energy.”
“I guess,” Delaney said. Actually, she’d been exhausted, but that was probably because she hadn’t been sleeping well at night. She couldn’t stop worrying about the possibility of a baby. She was going to feel terrible—even worse than she already did—about the way she’d deceived Conner if she found out she was indeed pregnant with his child. “What other signs are there?”
“I don’t know,” Rebecca responded.
“I bet some people don’t experience anything noticeable, not so soon,” Delaney said. Now dressed, she braced herself emotionally and opened the door to let Rebecca in so their collective willpower might influence the results. “Please don’t turn pink. Please don’t turn pink,” she muttered as they both stood by the small vanity and stared hard at the plastic indicator.
“Pink means there’s a baby?” Rebecca asked. “Pink means there’s a baby,” Delaney breathed.
“Isn’t there a part of you that wants it to turn pink?”
“Not anymore. I just want to forget that I could ever—”
“It’s turning pink,” Rebecca interrupted.
Delaney gripped the sides of the sink. “No, it’s not,” she said, “because if it is, I’m going to go crazy with guilt. And if I go crazy, I’m going to come and live with you and Buddy and drive you crazy. And—”
Rebecca grabbed Delaney’s arm so tightly it hurt. “It’s turning pink!” she cried again. “Look at it!”
Delaney leaned closer. What was at first barely a tinge became more obvious as she watched. “Oh my gosh,” she muttered and had to feel behind her for the toilet before her knees gave out. “I’m pregnant.”
Rebecca stared at her. “Don’t look so glum. This is—”
“If you say this is what I wanted, I’m going to kill you,”
Delaney interrupted.
“I thought it was what you wanted. You’ve been mooning over the idea of having a baby for the past few years and I...”
Her voice fell off, and Delaney suddenly realized, only because all her other thoughts were frozen with panic, that it had to be the first time she’d ever seen Rebecca at a loss for words.
“I’m going to have a baby,” she said, the pronouncement ringing like a death knell in the small room.
Rebecca’s smile looked forced. “That’s not such a bad thing,” she said. “I hated the idea of leaving you here alone. Now I can get married, knowing you’ll be just as happy as I am.”
“Happy?” Delaney echoed.
“Of course you’ll be happy. You’ll eventually forget about Conner and Boise and concentrate on the baby. And I’ll be her godmother, which means I’ll have to come back here for the birth and all the important occasions. It’ll be perfect. What are you going to name her?”
Name her? Delaney hadn’t thought past Please, God, forgive me for my terrible mistake. She couldn’t even summon the energy to tell Rebecca how ludicrous her question was. “Since Aunt Millie could never have kids, it might be nice to name the baby after her if it’s a girl,” Rebecca said cajolingly. “I mean, Millie’s a bit dated and sounds almost as bad as Lula Jane or Myrtle, but—”
“Do you think you’re helping?” Delaney asked.
Rebecca sat on the tile countertop and finally abandoned the pretense of “let’s be happy about this.”
“Okay,” she said. “So we have a problem. But if you really don’t want the baby, you could always have an abortion.”
Delaney shook her head. “Are you kidding? That’s the last thing I’d ever do.”
“Then, what do you suggest?”
“I need to find Conner. Tell him what I’ve done.”
“How?”
“I don’t know.”
“Listen, Laney, it’s too late for that. He’s gone, and he’s better off for it.”
“How do we know he’s better off?”
“He’s living the life he wants to live without any interference from you, for one thing. And think about the baby. What if he sues you for custody someday? Would you be able to give up your child? Once he knows about the pregnancy, you won’t be able to cut him out of your life, yet you have no way of knowing whether or not he’d be a good influence. Contacting him would only open a can of worms. What’s done is done. You need to deal with it and move on.”
Rebecca’s words made sense. Conner wasn’t ready for children. He’d told her that. He was simply a stranger who’d passed in and out of her life. She didn’t know where he lived; she didn’t know his last name. And he didn’t know anything about her, either.
Getting hold of herself, she nodded. “Okay.”
Rebecca squeezed her shoulder. “When do you think you’ll let the secret out?”
“Not for a while,” she said. “I have to come to terms with it myself first.” She closed her eyes. “Aunt Millie and Uncle Ralph are going to die when they hear.”
“What do you mean? They’ve been begging you for grandchildren.�
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“They mean the legitimate kind.”
“I know, but they’ll get used to this. Come on out of the bathroom. It’s not the end of the world.” Rebecca tugged on her hand until Delaney finally moved woodenly to the living room, where she sank, still numb and incredulous and sick inside, into her favorite easy chair, a castoff from Uncle Ralph when Aunt Millie bought him a new recliner for their fiftieth wedding anniversary.
“Maybe you should tell them right away and get it over with, so you don’t have to dread it,” Rebecca volunteered. “Thanks for the suggestion, but I don’t think so,” Delaney replied. “I won’t start to show for several months. No need to jump the gun and make a big announcement when something could still go wrong. A lot of women miscarry in their first trimester. Don’t you think I should at least wait until I pass that milestone before opening myself up to the scorn of the whole town?”
“Makes sense,” Rebecca admitted. “But if you wait too long, I’ll be gone. I’m getting married in June, remember?” Delaney folded her arms and leaned back, telling herself to take some deep, calming breaths. “How does your being gone affect when I should tell people about the baby?”
“If I’m here, they’ll blame me and my influence, and you’ll get off more easily. They’ll say, ‘Just look at Laney now, pregnant without a husband. We always knew what hangin’ around that Wells kid would do, but she wouldn’t listen to us.”’
Delaney was too emotionally devastated to laugh at her friend’s twangy imitation. And she sensed something serious, and very possibly painful, running beneath the words. Maybe being typecast a hellion in such a small town was as difficult as being typecast a Goody Two-shoes. No one gave Rebecca credit for her positive traits, and the townspeople, by refusing to adjust their image of her, didn’t allow her room to grow and change. If Delaney and Rebecca took the poor kids from the trailer park to see a movie or picked up trash on the streets to help get ready for rodeo season, Delaney received the credit. If they were together and got pulled over for a traffic violation, no matter who was driving, it was Rebecca who took the blame. Life had been that way for so long, Delaney had grown accustomed to it. But something in Rebecca’s voice made her consider the disparity now.